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"pariah dog" Definitions
  1. (especially in Asia) a dog that has no owner or home and is of no particular type

17 Sentences With "pariah dog"

How to use pariah dog in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "pariah dog" and check conjugation/comparative form for "pariah dog". Mastering all the usages of "pariah dog" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Instead, they rely on small suppliers, such as Peck O' Dirt and Pariah Dog Farm, for each week's supply of potatoes, fresh berries, foraged flowers, summer squash, heirloom tomatoes, husk cherries, and more.
An Indian pariah dog Pye-dog (sometimes pariah dog) is a term used to describe an ownerless, half-wild, free-ranging dog that lives in or close to human settlements throughout Asia. The term is derived from the Hindi pāhī, which translates to "outsider". The United Kennel Club uses the term pariah dog to classify various breeds in a sighthound and pariah group.
The Canaan Dog, also known as the Bedouin Sheepdog and Palestinian Pariah Dog, is a breed of pariah dog from the Middle East.The Howell Book of Dogs: The Definitive Reference to 300 Breeds and Varieties This dog is found in Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, the Sinai peninsula, and these or dogs very similar are found in Egypt, Iraq, and Syria. There are 2,000 to 3,000 Canaan dogs across the world, mostly in Europe and North America.
The Hawaiian Poi Dog ( or ʻīlio mākuʻe) is an extinct breed of pariah dog from Hawaiʻi which was used by Native Hawaiians as a spiritual protector of children and as a source of food.
The Basenji produces an unusual yodel-like sound, due to its unusually shaped larynx.Adapted from the book Why Pandas Do Handstands, 2006, by Augustus Brown. This trait also gives the Basenji the nickname barkless dog. Basenjis share many unique traits with pariah dog types.
The Indian pariah dog, also known as the Indian native dog or INDog, South Asian pye dog and Desi Dog, is a landrace of dog native to the Indian subcontinent. They have erect ears, a wedge-shaped head, and a curved tail. It is easily trainable and often used as a guard dog and police dog. This dog is an example of an ancient group of dogs known as pye-dogs.
This breed is known as "naadan" (നാടൻ) in Malayalam (Kerala), "naatu naai" (நாட்டு நாய்) (country dog) in Tamil (Tamil Nadu), "oora kukka" (ఊర కుక్క) in Telugu language in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, "ooru naai" (ಊರು ನಾಯಿ) in Kannada, "gavthi kutra" ( गावठी कुत्रा) in Marathi language in Maharashtra and "Bhusya Kukkur" (भूसीया कुकुर) in Nepal. It was referred to in the works of Rudyard Kipling as the "yellow pariah dog".Kipling, Rudyard. (1894) The Jungle Book.
In India, the National Security Guard inducted the Belgian Malinois into its K-9 Unit, Border Security Force and Central Reserve Police Force use Rajapalayam as guard dogs to support the Force in the borders of Kashmir. For regional security, the Delhi Police has recruited many of the city's street dogs to be trained for security purposes. The Bengal Police uses German Shepherds, Labrador Retrievers, and the Indian pariah dog in its bomb-sniffing squad.
On the way to their house in the Calle Nicaragua they stop at Jacques Laruelle's "bizarre" house, with the inscription No se puede vivir sin amar ("one cannot live without loving") on the wall, and Popocatepetl and Ixtaccihuatl come into view. The Consul tells Yvonne that Hugh is staying with him as well and is expected back from a trip this very day. As they enter the garden of their house a pariah dog follows them in.
Although described as having a "shepherd- mix" look, the potcake dog's appearance varies by island. It may resemble a typical pariah dog or have hound, mastiff, spaniel, terrier, or retriever characteristics. The type typically has pointed and cocked ears, a long face, and a smooth coat without undercoat, or less commonly, a "shaggy" or rough coat. As a result of their mixed heritage, potcakes vary widely in terms of color, with many being brown, white, black, and far more with mixed coats.
Street dogs at a crosswalk in Bucharest Street dogs, known in scientific literature as free-ranging urban dogs are unconfined dogs that live in cities. They live virtually everywhere where cities exist and the local human population allows, especially in the developing world and the former USSR. Street dogs may be stray dogs, pets which have strayed from or are abandoned by their owners, or may be feral animals that have never been owned. Street dogs may be stray purebreds, true mixed-breed dogs, or unbred landraces such as the Indian pariah dog.
Now wandering around to avoid Hugh and Yvonne, he finds an unoccupied ride called the Infernal Machine and is pressured by a gang of children to take the ride. He loses all of his possessions on the ride, which the children gather and return to him. The Consul still has more time to waste, so he stumbles into the Terminal Cantina El Bosque, wherein he chats with the proprietor, Senora Gregorio, and has at least two more drinks. The pariah dog follows him inside but is scared off when he rises.
She immigrated with her husband Dr Rudolph Menzel to Palestine in 1938. She was asked by the Haganah for help in setting up a dog section (forerunner to what would become Unit Oketz). Dr. Menzel found that the standard breeds used for guarding, tracking and other tasks were unable to cope with the harsh climate and terrain, so she sought an alternative, turning to the local pariah dog. She began a redomestication program of the pariah dogs living on the outskirts of settlements and with the Bedouin in the desert.
Indian pye- dogs have been used as guard dogs for centuries. The namesake of this breed was given during the British Raj in India after the Pariah tribe of the Madras Presidency. From the Anglo-Indian word pye or paë and Hindi pāhī meaning 'outsider', the Indian pariah dog is sometimes referred to as the pye-dog (also spelt pie or pi) and the Indian native dog.Merriam-Webster Dictionary It is popularly known as Desi Kutta or Desi Dog (which derives from the Hindustani word desi, meaning native), as well as the Indi-dog or In-dog (in various spellings).
This breed has also been called the Berber, after the Berber tribes who utilized it, and bears some resemblance to the Pariah dog who is believed to share its ancestry. As a protector of the desert nomad tribes, the most alert and aggressive dogs were staked around the perimeter of the camp at night. The Aidi has not been highly regarded by the tribes historically, as are most dogs other than the Sloughi and other breeds regarded as noble. However, Moroccans have recently formed a club to protect the purity of the breed which has contributed so much in so many roles, as protector, hunter, police dog, and pet.
Africanis dogs resting in the grass and enjoying the sun. A basic variety of landrace dog can be found distributed across Africa; within this broad grouping there are regional variations, believed to be the result of isolation and a limited degree of deliberate breeding, the name Africanis has been given to these dogs found in southern Africa. Some modern writers describe the Africanis as a pariah dog, this is considered an inappropriate classification as that term typically denotes an ownerless, free-ranging dog; whilst considered a landrance with limited human interference in their breeding, the Africanis was typically maintained by human owners. The Africanis, is a medium-sized, lightly-built dog with a long slender muzzle and usually a short coat, it has been described as resembling a cross between a Greyhound and a Dingo.
219x219px The origin of the Bakharwal Dog lies in northern India, specifically in the states of Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh. It has been bred by the Gujjar and Bakerwal castes, as well as other local people of Jammu and Kashmir and Himachal Pradesh, for the purpose of guarding their flocks of goats, sheep and cattle, along with their houses, from centuries. The Bakharwal Dog may be descended from crossbreeding the Tibetan Mastiff with the Indian pariah dog, though other scholars state that the Bakharwal Dog is the "oldest Indian Dog which since centuries has been surviving with the Gujjar tribe." The Bakharwal Dog has been targeted by separatist militants in the erstwhile Indian state of Jammu and Kashmir, who shot the dogs to prevent them from alerting people of their intrusion.

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